Dredging

Dredging is one of our key tasks, both to maintain adequate water depth for boaters and as part of our work to improve water quality.

Over the years sediment has increased as a result of environmental changes, specifically more algae in the lakes and more soil erosion. We hope improvements in water quality, measures to reduce bank erosion, improve bank protection and manage flood risk will lessen the need for dredging.

To protect navigation channels and this internationally important wetland we aim to:

Identify how much sediment is coming into the Broads

Work with other organisations to reduce the amount coming in

Define desired channel dimensions in order to plan what future dredging will be needed

Reuse dredged sediment wherever possible

The two dredging methods routinely used are grab (or excavator) and suction. Suction dredging uses a floating platform with an engine that powers a pump. The sediment is passed along tubes to an adjacent disposal site, often a field of low ecological quality.

Furthermore, the Broads Authority’s maintenance dredging activities in the Broadland rivers generates thousands of tonnes of sediment each year. In the short video below, filmed near Stokesby on the River Bure, dredged sediment is being used to strengthen the floodbank which protects the land behind from high water levels. The reeded edge of the river is also in the process of being restored so that the future reed grown for thatching is as healthy as possible.

Award-winning projects

We have won awards for our innovative dredging techniques which were developed and carried out under the Promoting Integrated Sediment Management (PRISMA) project.

PRISMA is aEuropean Regional Development Fund project under which we were given £800,000 which we have match-funded for implementing dredging solutions in the Broads.It involves working and sharing expertise with Dutch, Belgian and French partners allowing usto:

One of the three key projects in the Broads was rebuilding a bank and reed bed at Salhouse Broad, which was awarded the UK's first Working with Nature Certificate of Recognition, one of only three to be awarded in Europe. It was also commended in the 2013 Water Renaissance Awards.

The other PRISMA projects were the creation of a spit of land in Duck Broad using gabion baskets filled with dredged sediment and the commission of a new mud wherry. You can read more about all of these schemes on our Projects page.

You might also like

Introduction

The Norfolk and Suffolk Broads is Britain's largest protected wetland and third largest inland waterway, with the status of a national park. It's also home to some of the rarest plants and animals in the UK. The Broads Authority was set up in 1989, with responsibility for conservation, planning, recreation and waterways.